Here's what you should do

Accessibility Statement

This is the official accessibility statement for the iMarket Solutions web site. If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions, please feel free to fill out our contact form.

Access Keys

Most modern browsers support jumping to specific links within a web site through the use of keyboard shortcuts (called access keys) defined by the web site. On Windows, you can press ALT + an access key; on Macintosh, you can press Control + an access key.

The following access keys are available throughout this web site:

Access Key

Description

1

Home page

2

Skip over navigation and go directly to content

3

Site Map

4

Search

9

Contact

0

Accessibility Statement and access key listing

Standards Compliance

All pages throughout this web site comply with priority 1 guidelines of the W3 Web Content Accessibility Guidelines and the U.S. Federal Government Section 508 Guidelines.

All pages throughout this web site validate as XHTML 1 Strict. They are structured using semantic markup. For example, an H1 tag is used for the title of each page, H2 is used for subheadings, H3 for tertiary headings, etc. In particular, this enables JAWS users to skip to the next post using ALT+INSERT+2.

All table cells are explicitly associated with their corresponding header cells to aid screen readers in rendering them in a clear and meaningful way. Where applicable, all tables contain captions and summaries.

Navigation aids

All pages have rel="home" links to aid navigation in text-only browsers. Netscape 6 and Mozilla users can also take advantage of this feature by selecting View ⁄ Show/Hide ⁄ Site Navigation Bar ⁄ Show Only As Needed (or Show Always).

All pages have a “skip navigation” link to allow text-only browsers and screen readers to skip directly to the content of the document.

A Site Map is available which contains links to all of the pages within the web site.

Links

Whenever possible, link text is written to make sense out of context to aid browsers (such as JAWS, Home Page Reader, Lynx, and Opera) that allow the user to browse a list of links culled from a page. Many links contain additional descriptive information in the title tag.

There are no links that contain Javascript in their href attributes. All links can be followed by any browser, regardless of whether scripting is turned off. All links that open new windows inform the user within the contents of the title attribute.

Images

All images include descriptive text provided through the alt attribute.

Design

This site uses cascading style sheets for visual layout. If your browser does not support style sheets, the content of the page is still readable.

This site uses only relative font sizes to ensure compatibility with text resizing features in visual browsers.

Here's what people say:

We are on page 1 on Google for nearly every keyword and phrase that we had targeted when the project began. In fact, on about half of them, we are the first contractor listed! Campaign, leads and revenue from our old website ranked 12th and 14th respectively for the January to June period in 2009. In the same period this year, the site ranks 3rd in both leads and revenue compared to all other forms of marketing.

Here's what's going on:

Many people perceive the Penguin algorithm as nothing more than a thug, here to force thousands of small businesses into paid advertisement on Google by tanking their organic visibility. So I’m sure you can imagine the unrest within the community as the one year anniversary of the last update passed. But on Friday (October 17th, 2014), webmasters finally got their wish – Google began rolling out Penguin 3.0. Whether or not it was what they had hoped for is yet to be determined.